bringing landscapes, lifestyles and livelihoods together to assess and engage in improving natural...
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Presented by Andrew Campbell as part of the 2009 Place and Purpose Symposium run by the Landscape Science ClusterTRANSCRIPT
Bringing landscapes, lifestyles and livelihoods together to assess and engage in improving natural
resource condition.
Andrew Campbell
Knowledgefor managing Australian landscapes
Andrew Campbell
Place & Purpose Symposium, Adelaide
30 September 2009
www.triplehelix.com.au
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My perspectives
• Farming background Cavendish (SW Vic)
• Forestry (Creswick & Melbourne)
• Extension officer, Shepparton, Bendigo &
Stawell
• Manager, Potter Farmland Plan
• National Landcare Facilitator
• Post-grad studies, Holland & France
• Senior Executive, Australian Government
• 7 years CEO of Land & Water Australia
• Triple Helix Consulting
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Outline
1. Context
2. Imperative
3. Knowledge needs
4. Implications for landscape science
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1. CONTEXT
• Climate
• Water
• Energy
• Soil & land
• Food
• Human health & animal welfare
• Natural Resource Management
Source: WBCSD & IUCN 2008; Harvard Medical School 2008
Population & carbon emissions
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Water
• Every calorie takes one litre of
water to produce, on average*
• Like the Murray Darling Basin,
all the world‘s major food
producing basins are
effectively ‗closed‘ or already
over-committed
* IWMI 2007
Energy & nutrients
• The era of abundant, cheap fossil fuels is over
• Rising energy costs = rising fertiliser costs
Remaining reserves (billions of barrels) of crude oil (EWG 2007)7
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Feeding the world
• The world needs to almost double food production by
2050, & improve distribution
• We have done this in the past, mainly through
clearing, cultivating and irrigating more land
– and to a lesser extent better varieties, more fertiliser etc
• Climate change is narrowing those options, with limits
to water, land, energy & nutrients
• Concern among rich consumers about modern
industrial food systems
– human health, animal welfare, environment
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But maybe we ain‘t seen nothin yet….
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Land & soil
• The FAO recently assessed trends in land condition (measured
by net primary productivity) from 1981-2004
• Land degradation is increasing in severity and extent:
– >20 percent of all cultivated areas
>30 percent of forests
>10 percent of grasslands
• 1.5 billion people depend directly on land that is being degraded
• Land degradation is cumulative. Limited overlap between 24% of
the land surface identified as degraded now and the 15% classified in
1991,
because NPP has flatlined near zero in flogged areas
http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2008/1000874/index.html
2. THE IMPERATIVEPROFOUND TECHNICAL CHALLENGES:1. To decouple economic growth from carbon emissions
2. To increase water productivity
decoupling the every calorie = 1 litre relationship
3. To increase energy productivity– more food energy out per unit of energy in
– while shifting from fossil fuels to renewable energy
4. To develop more sustainable food systems– while conserving biodiversity
– and improving landscape amenity
5. To achieve all of the above simultaneously
– If you are in the water business, you are in the energy business,
and if you are in the energy business, you will soon be in the carbon
business12
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3 Pillars of Sustainability
KNOWLEDGE: Sustainable systems and practices must exist, and the know-how
for people to implement them
CAPACITY: People must have the wherewithal to be
able to implement more sustainable systems and
practices at sufficient scale
COMMITMENT: People must
want it
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3. KNOWLEDGE
From a public policy perspective, there are
three main reasons to invest in knowledge:
1.To help us make better decisions & policy
2.To underpin the innovation process
3.So that we can learn as we go along
— in the words of Peter Cullen:
“at least we should be making new mistakes”
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Knowledge 101
• Knowledge happens between the ears
• An individual cognitive process and highly contextual:
– “I only know what I know when I need to know it”
– knowledge is most useful when it is needed
• Revealed in artifacts (writing, art, formulae, products etc), skills,
experience, rules of thumb and natural talent (Dave Snowden)
• Across quite different domains:
– Including local, Indigenous, scientific, strategic (organisational)
• And different sectors:
– research, policy, management, planning, extension, education, monitoring
• People default to known, trusted, accessible sources
The Cynefin knowledge framework*
• Climate change spans all of these domains
• If temp increase > 2ºC, then disorder & chaos will reign
• The challenge is to handle the necessary range of simultaneous responses
– to work in all of these domains at once
– to develop a system-wide perspective
– & the knowledge systems and learning strategies to underpin
that perspective
* David Snowden & Mary Boone (2007)
“Leader's Framework for Decision Making” Harvard Business Review16
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Observations on the current situation
• Community concern exceeds political will
• Knowledge at all levels is patchy
– “De Nile ain’t just a river in Egypt…”
• The overall NRM/Ag knowledge system lacks cohesion
– Research investment is concentrated in a few big players
– Alternative technologies/approaches struggle for funds
– Cross-system learning is poor
– Especially across climate-carbon-water-energy-food system
boundaries
• Climate chaos/water/energy literacy is far too low
– in the wider community
– in the bureaucracy
– in corporate boardrooms & management
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Response
Options
We need to be
operating in each of
these quadrants
Develop research
partnerships +/or
link into existing
collaborations
Source: FFI CRC EverCrop
Lyndoch
Nurioopta
Eden Valley
N
Beware of
generalising
Source: Peter Hayman
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We need a third agricultural revolution— what might it look like?
• Closed loop farming systems (water, energy, nutrients, carbon)
• Farming systems producing renewable bioenergy
• Smart metering, sensing, telemetry, robotics, guidance
• Understanding & use of soil microbial activity (&GM)
• Urban food production (roofs etc), recycling waste streams & urban
water and nutrients
• Detailed product specification (e.g. Tesco)
• ‗Carbon plus‘ offsets and incentives
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A detour: woody biomass
energy• Learning from the Vikings:
– Finland: same area and population as Victoria, tougher
climate, shorter growing season, slower growth rates
– Private forestry thinnings etc produce 23% of Finland‘s
primary energy, over 75% of thermal energy needs, and
20% of Finland‘s electricity
– In Sweden it is 20% with a target of 40%
• Foran et al suggest woody biomass energy can fuel
Australia
• WA already has a pilot plant using mallees
– Verve Energy at Narrogin
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Transition to carbon-neutral,
energy-positive rural landscapes
• We should market ‗carbon plus‘ grass-fed, rain-fed, red
meat
– Which means significant offsets built-in to grazing systems
– Potential benefits for habitat, micro-climate, aesthetics, water
quality, shelter, bioenergy and carbon
• BUT: MIS schemes show that, without good planning &
controls, the market will default to large monoculture plantations
replacing agriculture, not integrated into farming (sub-prime
carbon!)
•
•
―Carbon plus‖ wool, beef and sheep meat
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Forestry integrated with farming
vs replacing farming
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Forestry integrated with farming
vs replacing farming
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The temporal dimension
E. Nitens harvested from riparian revegetation after 16 years
Rowan Reid, Bambra Agroforestry Farm
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The temporal dimension (2)
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John Marriott direct-seeding a shelterbelt
on the Potter Farmland Plan ―Helm
View‖ demonstration farm 1985
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The shelterbelt from previous slide in 2005 (20 years on)
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NRM: sequential vs parallel evolution
Three major developments in NRM over the last 20
years:
1. Community landcare
2. The regional model
3. Assets-based approach — evidence-based targeting
• There is a tendency to see these developments as
sequential: each supplanting the previous approach
• In fact they should be implemented in parallel
– They are complementary, mutually reinforcing
– Synergistic with good planning & delivery
The human dimension
• Managing whole landscapes
- landscapes: ―where nature meets culture‖ (Simon Schama)
- landscapes are socially constructed
- beyond ‗ecological apartheid‘
- sustainability means people management
- engage values, perceptions, aspirations, behaviour
- build knowledge grounded in a sense of place
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An engaged community base is crucial
• Rapid, often surprising, on-going environmental change will
challenge governments and industries, and stress communities.
• Many responses (proactive and reactive) will need to be worked out
at regional and local levels. Successful implementation of tough
decisions depends on community support.
• This requires environmentally literate and capable delivery
frameworks at regional scale, involving community leaders and
engaging grassroots volunteers.
• Convergence in climate, energy, water and food mandates an
integrated planning & delivery framework
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A Prime Ministerial Mandate
Kevin Rudd, Westminster Abbey, 31 March 2009:
suggesting that the free market needs a moral compass:
“To these values of security, liberty and prosperity
must also be grafted the values of
equity, of sustainability and community.”
• Equity, Sustainability, Community…
• Sounds like Landcare values to me
– Revisit community engagement & empowerment models
– Most adaptation knowledge will come from
the community, not from experts
– web 2.0 is ideally suited here - social tools critical
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4. IMPLICATIONS FOR LANDSCAPE SCIENCE
• Consideration of whole landscapes is more crucial than ever
• We need tools that can handle the convergence of carbon, water,
energy, food and health
– how these interactions play out in rural landscapes
– and regional economies
• Make sure the portfolio is well weighted
– From ‗modify‘ and ‗adapt‘ to ‗innovate‘ and ‗create‘
• Be pluralistic in disciplines and methodologies
• Pay attention to the whole knowledge system
– For decisions, for innovation, and for long term learning
• Seek to engage and work with community science
– Invest in understanding the knowledge need
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Policy - putting it all together
• ―Joined-up Government‖ has to be more than a slogan
• New alliances, platforms, networks are needed
• Climate chaos is both a row and a column
• Planning for carbon, energy, transport, water, waste, fires,
health, food and demographics needs integration
• This requires a solid and extensive evidence base in the ‗known‘,
‗knowable‘ and ‗complex‘ domains
• Chaotic domains demand good adaptive tools
– e.g. real-time monitoring, environmental literacy, scenarios
– resilience attributes (flexibility, redundancy, buffering etc)
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A 7 point plan for renovating agriculture
and natural resources
1. Rejuvenate Landcare and Re-engage the Community
2. Reinforce the Regional/Catchment Model
3. Rewire Environmental Information Systems
4. Revolutionise Agricultural Research, Extension and Education(rebrand agriculture around food, carbon, landscapes & energy)
5. Reform Drought Policy & Rural & Regional Services
6. Re-unite the Carbon, Water, Energy, Food & Farming agendas
7. Redesign the Institutional Architecture
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Underpinning principles
• Building Resilience
• Balancing centralism and subsidiarity
• Re-engaging stakeholders and devolving responsibility
• Taking the time necessary to sort through complex,
contested, connected issues
• Building, sustaining and using a comprehensive evidence
base
• Investing in skills, knowledge, innovation and leadership
• Budgeting for longer term stability
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Take home messages
• We are in a period of rapid environmental change
– Not all predictable, often bewildering
• This is not a blip. Normal service will not be resumed
• Business as usual is not a viable trajectory
– Not in business, not in policy and not in science
• These are exciting days for landscape science
• Food, carbon, water, energy, biodiversity & landscape
amenity
– A compelling big picture agenda needs fleshing out
GO FOR IT!
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For more info
www.triplehelix.com.au
The Environment Institute